Estimating Nitrogen Credit from Manure

Manure is a valuable source of nutrients offering agronomic and soil health value, writes Rick Koelsch, Professor of Biological Systems Engineering, University of Nebraska-Lincoln. Most manure nutrients (e.g., phosphorus) can be managed successfully with traditional soil analysis. However, nitrogen in manure requires some simple advance planning to ensure that it is given proper credit for offsetting commercial fertilizer inputs.

Manure nitrogen comes in two forms, ammonium-N (or NH4+-N) originating from urine and organic-N originating from the feces. Soil samples typically only measure nitrate-N (NO3–N) although ammonium-N can be requested. Ammonium-N from manure will convert to nitrate-N in the spring as soils warm. Organic-N from manure is a slow release nitrogen that converts to crop available-N through the warmer summer months of the growing season. A late fall soil sample will completely miss any manure nitrogen and a spring soil test may only partially credit manure’s ammonium-N and not credit any of the organic-N.

Advertisement

Read more at Water.UNL.edu.

Top Articles
Rantizo Expands Drone Portfolio with XAG P100 Pro

0
Advertisement